Dr dre the chronic album art hd
The Death Row roster (including Warren G, Nate Dogg, Samara, Bushwick Bill) features heavily, mixing and matching and taking turns to lay down their bars over Dre's beats. Following the album's intro, Snoop's funky, laid back voice is featured on "Fuck Wit Dre Day (And Everybody's Celebratin')", cooly expressing the animosity between Death Row and Dre's former team members. suffered serious vocal damage in a car accident.
The birth of G-funk introduced new faces, most notably rapper Snoop Dogg, who provided the answer to Dre's writing concerns after The D.O.C. Dre opted to use more live instruments to have more control over samples, ultimately redefining the West coast sound. Both events signalled the end for one of the genre's most important and influential groups in N.W.A., and the start of a new era in hip-hop. Released in December, 1992, this 16 track opus was Dre's debut as solo artist and the first album to be released on Death Row Records, the label he founded with "Suge" Knight and The D.O.C.
Dre's The Chronic is so much more than just a rap record. (c) 2001 Death Row Records / Entertainment One U.S., LPĭr. Dre - Fuck Wit Dre Day (And Everybody's Celebratin')